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Re: Manipulating the facts
- To: "Al Kolwicz" <alkolwicz@xxxxxxxxx>, "Citizens for Verifiable Voting" <cvv-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "CFVI" <cfvi@xxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: Manipulating the facts
- From: "Dr. Charles E. Corry" <ccorry@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2006 16:45:26 -0600
- Cc: "Ann Imse" <imsea@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Bente Birkeland" <bente@xxxxxxxx>, "'Bernie Morson'" <morsonb@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Beth Skinner" <Beth@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Boulder Weekly - Editor'" <editorial@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Brad Turner" <bturner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Bronson Hilliard" <hilliard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Clay Evans'" <evansc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Gary Harmon" <gharmon@xxxxxxxx>, "George Merritt" <gmerritt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Grace Hood" <GH@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Greg Avery'" <averyg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Jennifer Ooton" <JOoton@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Jerry Lewis'" <jwlewis@xxxxxxxx>, "'Jody Strogoff'" <jody@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Joel Edelstein'" <joel@xxxxxxxx>, "'John Boogert'" <boogert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "John Ingold" <jingold@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Karen Treanor-Brown" <staff@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Kevin Kaufman'" <KaufmanK@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Lynn Bartels'" <bartelsl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Newsroom Daily_Times-Call'" <pressrelease@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Newsroom Denver_Post'" <newsroom@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Paul Shockley" <pshockley@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Perry Swanson" <pswanson@xxxxxxxxxxx>, "Pierette J. Shields" <pshields@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, qyoung@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "'Richard Valenty'" <valenty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Rocky Mountain NEWSROOM" <Metro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Ryan Morgan'" <morganr@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Ryan Slabaugh" <rslabaugh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Sam Fuqua'" <sam@xxxxxxxx>, "'Steve Rubick'" <kuka@xxxxxxx>, "'Susan Greene'" <sgreene@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Trevor Hughes'" <thughes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Vanessa Miller" <millerv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Victoria Camron" <vcamron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
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Title: Re: Manipulating the facts
Charles E. Corry, Ph.D.,
F.G.S.A.
President, Equal Justice Foundation
http://www.ejfi.org/
455 Bear Creek Road
Colorado Springs, Colorado 80906-5820
Telephone: (719) 520-1089
Personal home page: http://corry.ws
Curriculum vitae:
http://www.marquiswhoswho.net/charleselmocorry/Default.aspx
The Equal Justice
Foundation is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation supported by members
and contributions. Dues are $25 per year and you may join at
http://www.ejfi.org/Join.htm.
Contributions are tax
deductible and can be made on the Web at http://www.ejfi.org/join2.htm
or by sending a check to the address above.
Federal employees in
Colorado can contribute through the Combined Federal Campaign. The EJF
is listed in six Colorado regions. In the Denver region our agency
number is 4086. In Pike's Peak #6024. In Larimer County # 8032. In
Weld County # 4022. In SW Colorado (Mesa Verde-Durango) # A003. In
2006 we will also be listed in western Colorado and Utah.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Issues of interest to the Equal Justice Foundation
http://www.ejfi.org/ are:
Civilization
http://www.ejfi.org/Civilization/Civilization.htm
Courts and Civil Liberties
http://www.ejfi.org/Courts/Courts.htm
Domestic
Violence http://www.ejfi.org/DV/dv.htm
Domestic Violence
Against Men in Colorado http://www.dvmen.org/
Emerson
case
http://www.ejfi.org/emerson.htm
Families and
Marriage
http://www.ejfi.org/family/family.htm
Prohibitions and the War On Drugs
http://www.ejfi.org/Prohibition/Prohibition.htm
Vote Fraud and Election
Issues
http://www.ejfi.org/Voting/Voting.htm
_____________________________________________________________________________
The good
men may do separately is small compared with what they may do
collectively.
Benjamin Franklin
At 10:36 AM -0600 10/2/06, Al Kolwicz wrote:
The attached "More voters using
absentee ballots" and "Cost to vote is increasing" are great
illustrations of government propaganda.
Boulder County has done everything it can
do to get people to vote by absentee ballot. Why?
1. Staff
hopes to reduce the Election Day workload on the poorly designed HART
ballot scanning equipment, and
2. Staff
hopes to reduce long lines at Early and Election Day polling
places.
What harm is done by encouraging people
to vote by absentee ballot? Absentee ballots are not secure and
they result in disenfranchised voters
1. Not every
absentee ballot gets counted.
2. Absentee
ballots get lost and stolen and can be switched.
3. Eligible
voter's ballots get rejected by staff.
4. Ineligible
people get to vote, hence eligible votes get cancelled.
On a practical side, absentee ballots
cost more and take much longer to process than in-person paper
ballots.
Staff knows that informed voters study
the candidates and issues before they come to the polling place. Most
come prepared with a checklist of their votes. Instead of
educating voters to come to the polls prepared, staff promotes the
myth of the unprepared voter. This encourages voters to come to
the polls unprepared.
And don't be comforted by staff claims
that the Logic and Accuracy Tests and the Post Election Audit will
catch any problems. This is an irresponsible and absolutely
untrue claim.
Why has Boulder County hired a person to
promote the insecure, inaccurate, and expensive absentee ballot?
Because for staff, elections are all about staff convenience and
making staff look good.
What is our advice to voters?
(1) Always use a
paper ballot (not a paper receipt).
(2) Personally
cast your anonymous ballot into the ballot box.
(3) Don't vote
absentee or provisional ballots unless there is absolutely no
alternative. (These ballots must be placed into a sealed
envelop, and risk being not counted.)
(4) Never use
voting equipment that records your votes electronically, even if the
equipment also prints your votes on a paper receipt. (The votes
on the electronic record decide the election, not the ones on the
paper receipt.)
Al Kolwicz
CAMBER - Citizens for Accurate Mail
Ballot Election Results
2867 Tincup Circle
Boulder, CO 80305
303-494-1540
AlKolwicz@xxxxxxxxx
www.users.qwest.net/~alkolwicz
www.coloradovoter.blogspot.com
CAMBER is a dedicated group of
volunteers who are working to ensure that every voter gets to vote
once, every vote is counted once, and that every ballot is secure and
anonymous.
.
From: "Al Kolwicz" <alkolwicz@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "Al Kolwicz" <AlKolwicz@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: PRESS 10022006 Cost to vote 'is increasing'
Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2006 09:12:59 -0600
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Cost to vote 'is increasing'
Election officials to seek more money for
security measures
By John Aguilar, Camera Staff
Writer
October 2, 2006
Boulder County election officials will be
asking county commissioners for more money as early as this week to
cover the expense of election security measures newly mandated by the
Colorado secretary of state.
"The good news is most of the
security procedures announced by the secretary of state are already
covered in our county procedures," said Josh Liss, elections
coordinator for Boulder County. "We are in the process of
digesting all these rules, trying to put a dollar figure to them, and
we'll be asking the commissioners for supplemental
funding."
Liss said he doesn't know how much money
his department will request, but it will need to be enough to cover
the cost of purchasing new video surveillance cameras and additional
tamper-evident seals for electronic voting equipment. He said the new
regulations also would increase payroll costs in his department as
elections employees put in more hours deciphering and implementing the
security measures.
"All the while, the cost of
elections is increasing and the taxpayers are footing the bill,"
Liss said.
County Commissioner Tom Mayer said last
week that he hadn't yet seen the edict from the secretary of state's
office, but he didn't think the board would have much choice about
whether to give the Clerk and Recorder's Office additional funds.
"If we have to comply, we have to
comply," he said.
The stepped-up security rules were
announced by Secretary of State Gigi Dennis on Wednesday in response
to a lawsuit over the integrity of the state's electronic voting
machines, which plaintiffs alleged could be tampered with to
manipulate election results.
On Sept. 22, a Denver district judge
ruled in that suit that while Colorado could go ahead with electronic
voting, the state and the plaintiffs had to come up with a plan to
improve the security standards of voting equipment before the November
election.
Those measures call for surveillance
video cameras in areas where voting equipment is used and stored,
criminal background checks on all county employees who have access to
the data-sensitive components of the voting machines and a
more-comprehensive series of seals on the equipment to prevent
tampering.
Liss said his division will need to
install more security cameras at its offices on 33rd Street - to
monitor the area where absentee ballots are handled and to record the
comings and goings of election staff in the adjoining warehouse, where
election supplies are stored.
He said he also will be required to
purchase additional tamper-evident seals for the electronic voting
equipment.
"None of this is in any way
optional," he said. "All of this has to be done by Nov.
7."
He said he is particularly annoyed that
county clerks had no input regarding the new measures.
"There was no solicitation of the
counties asking, 'Hey, can you physically do this?'" he said.
Liss said the chance that someone could
tamper with the county's electronic voting machines as they are
configured currently is "far-fetched."
He said he is one of only three election
officials who have access to the part of his office's secure storage
site for voting machines, optical scanners and tally stations. And he
said breaking into voting equipment is virtually impossible, given the
fact that it is secured three times over with numbered seals.
He said he planned to continue the policy
of allowing supply judges to take election equipment and supplies home
with them the Saturday before the election.
Shirley Vancleave, 77, said the new
security rules don't intimidate her. The Boulder resident, who has
been serving as an election judge off and on for 25 years, said she
probably will do it again in November.
"If that's what we gotta do, that's
what we gotta do," she said. "Somebody has to do this job;
otherwise, we lose our voting process."
Copyright 2006, DailyCamera. All Rights
Reserved.
From: "Al Kolwicz" <alkolwicz@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "Al Kolwicz" <AlKolwicz@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: PRESS 10022006 More voters using absentee ballots
Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2006 09:13:51 -0600
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More voters using absentee ballots
By John Aguilar, Camera Staff
Writer
October 2, 2006
Boulder County voters have requested
nearly twice the number of absentee ballots this year as they did
during the last midterm election.
And that margin is certain to increase
leading up to the Nov. 7 election, as a full month remains for voters
to apply for an absentee ballot from the Boulder County Clerk and
Recorder's Office.
"We definitely have an interest in
absentees," said Carrie Haverfield, voter education and outreach
specialist with the Clerk and Recorder's Office, as she manned a voter
registration booth at the Boulder Fall Festival on the Pearl Street
Mall on Sunday afternoon.
Haverfield said about two dozen people at
the festival filled out forms for an absentee ballot in just an hour
Sunday afternoon.
As of late last week, 28,243 voters in
the county had requested absentee ballots. That compares to 16,150
absentee ballot requests during the 2002 midterm election, Haverfield
said. The increase in absentee ballot requests is due in large part to
voters' unease about using electronic voting equipment at the polling
places and a record-length ballot that requires extra time and effort
to digest.
"I tell them that the state Blue
Book is itself 55 pages long, so that should give you an idea of
what's coming up," Haverfield said, referring to the ballot
information booklet sent to every Colorado voter.
Also on hand at the festival was a Hart
Intercivic electronic voting machine for people to try out.
Matt Jacobs, 49, and his 12-year-old son,
Zach, managed to spin and press their way through a shortened, mock
ballot on the voting machine without much trouble.
"I was nervous about making the
wrong selection, but it was pretty intuitive," Matt Jacobs
said.
The machine allows voters several
opportunities to back up during the process and change a previous
choice. It also provides a printout that can be checked before the
final ballot is cast.
Electronic voting has been under attack
in the state, especially after a suit was filed against the state
alleging that voting machines were prone to tampering and could be
manipulated by someone with knowledge of its software.
Matt Jacobs said he has confidence in the
technology, particularly since it records on paper the choices voters
make. He said he had no reason to suspect that election officials in
Boulder County would try to manipulate the results recorded in the
machines.
"This isn't Ohio, is it?" he
said.
Copyright 2006, DailyCamera. All Rights
Reserved.
--