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FW: From Bev Harris -- The inside scoop on Diebold lawyer memos



Think this is worth mentioning on air tomorrow night?


From: Bevharrismail@xxxxxxx
To: Ekatz123@xxxxxxx
Subject: From Bev Harris -- The inside scoop on Diebold lawyer memos Date: Tue, 27 Apr 2004 00:29:17 EDT


Contact info for interviews: 206-335-7747 Bevharrismail@xxxxxxx
Black Box Voting: http://www.blackboxvoting.org

Scroll down for links to selected Diebold lawyer memos:
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0404/S00199.htm

Having reviewed the full set of Diebold lawyer memos, including those not
made public, I can report that these memos reveal a picture that brings Diebold
fully to the level of malfeasance of Enron.


Diebold law firm Jones Day has sued the Oakland Tribune seeking return of
leaked memos written by its lawyers. The lawsuit appears to pit the principle of
attorney-client privilege against protections against forcing the media to
reveal the sources.


But the issue may be simpler than it appears. In a case of legal malpractice,
the documents aren't protectable and the whistleblower has the right to blow
that whistle. The memos from Diebold's lawyers contain material lies in drafts
for responses to a series of 10 questions posed by the secretary of state and
the voting panel.


When I saw the leaked memos, I wondered whether the lawyers were lying to the
secretary of state because Diebold misled them or whether it was their
decision to tell the lie. If it was their decision, it constitutes malpractice.


Then, Wednesday at the Voter Panel hearing, the attorney from Jones Day
stepped up to testify that it was HIS IDEA to write the information in the way they
did. Of course he claimed it was not a lie, but parsed it in such a way that
one had to do mental gymnastics in order to follow his argument.


Lawyers can parse, spin, and reframe without violating the law. But what
Jones Day did went further than that.

It was in response to the Diebold lawyer that that the panel made the comment
to the lawyer and to Urosevich: "So you are either misleading us or lying,
which is it?"


If a lawyer participates in deliberate lying on formal interogatories, his
work cannot be protected as attorney-client privilege. More on what makes the
Diebold lawyer lies not protectable below.


A problematic area for the Diebold lawyers is the part of the lawyer memos
where, when they are discussing what to produce in response to a demand to
produce documents, they make the comment "We have to find out what the secretary of
state has." Immediately afterward they write something to this effect: "We
want to minimize what we produce."


But their production must be based on what they have, not on what the
Secretary of State has. It appears that they were trying to figure out whether they'd
get caught if they omitted stuff or lied.


It turns out they did get caught. This became a material issue, because the
worst of the misleading, or lying, had to do with whether Diebold uses
customized software for its votercard encoder (it does use customized software, but
the lawyers written response to the secretary of state said it doesn't). In the
lawyer memos:


- The lawyers were wondering which documents from the Diebold FTP site the
Secretary of State has -- that's relevant because on that FTP site was proof
that Diebold does indeed customize its votercard software. They seem to want to
know whether the Secretary of State has that info before they tell him that the
votercard stuff is NOT modified (which is what they said).


- At the core of the issue is whether Diebold had to certify its votercard
encoder software (yes, if customized; no, if off-the-shelf).

- Diebold never certified it (an illegal procedure, if the votercard software
is customized)


- When the lawyers responded that Diebold used off-the-shelf stuff that was
never modified, therefore it didn't need to be certified, this was a lie.

- The documents on the FTP site, and James Dunn's testimony (which the
lawyers didn't know was coming) proved that Diebold did customize the votercard
software and therefore, should have certified it.


- This was a significant and material lie, because it is exactly this
votercard software that failed on March 2, (in 40% of the San Diego locations and in
nearly 30% of Alameda County locations) causing many voters to be
disenfranchised.


The attorneys also submitted lies about inability to obtain source code.
Diebold claims it has ISO 9000 status, a quality control label of sorts. Indeed,
Diebold represented to certifier Wyle Laboratories that its TSx system followed
ISO 9000 standards. Yet the lawyers wrote, when asked by the secretary of
state to produce the source code for the TSx, that it might take many months --
up to SIX MONTHS, in fact -- for Diebold to collect together its source code.
This would be a specific violation of ISO 9000 standards, and has led some
citizens to call for ISO 9000 decertification of Diebold.


Either Diebold is not ISO 9000 compliant (but they represented that it is) or
it is ISO 9000 compliant, but is lying about its ability to lay its hands on
its own source code.


Yes, it appears that the lawyers participated in material lies which caused
real harm, and that they did so with intent. And this will ultimately make it
impossible for them to protect their documents.


Bev Harris
Now go take back your vote: http://www.blackboxvoting.org
Contact info: Bev Harris
330 SW 43rd St PMB K-547
Renton WA 98055
Bevharrismail@xxxxxxx
This is the correct Amazon address for book purchase:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/1890916900

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