posted by Jack
In a breaking news story NBC has been quietly checking the voter rolls looking for an exact match in names and DOB against the national census for deceased persons. Incredible they found over 25,000 dead people still voting in CA. But, if you listen to the Bill Mahr show you would no there hasn’t been one case of voter fraud in a decade.
Early this year researches reported, “No one knows how widespread this problem is, because county election supervisors have no way to track non-citizens who live here.
So NBC2 did something election officials never thought to do, and found them on our own.
“I vote every year,” Hinako Dennett told NBC2.
The Cape Coral resident is not a US citizen, yet she’s registered to vote.
NBC2 found Dennett after reviewing her jury excusal form. She told the Clerk of Court she couldn’t serve as a juror because she wasn’t a U.S. citizen.
We found her name, and nearly a hundred others like her, in the database of Florida registered voters.
Naples resident Yvonne Wigglesworth is also a not a citizen, but is registered to vote. She claims she doesn’t know how she got registered.”
Locally, the Butte Taxpayers Alliance has been investigating voter fraud. They are currently matching addressess to suspicious numbers of voters, more than 10 people voting from just one street address.
One of the major problems, and one of the easiest to find and correct when it comes to voter fraud, has been the failure of county governments to remove deceased names from the absentee ballots. Illegal immigrants voting and felons voting are not quite as easy to detect. It’s estimated that over 1,000,000 votes will be cast nationwide today that are illegal.
Earlier this year in a battle ground state…”CINCINNATI, Ohio — An outdoor advertising company says it’s in the process of removing voter-fraud messages from billboards in the Cincinnati area. (Thanks to democrats complaining)
Norton Outdoor Advertising said Thursday it has reached an agreement with a family foundation that has been running the displays to remove them as soon as possible.
The billboards read: “Voter Fraud Is A Felony!”
The company’s executive vice president Mike Norton said in a statement that the foundation bought the ads to make people aware of voting regulations, and not to make a political statement. He said they agreed to take the ads down because they were being viewed as an attempt to intimidate voters, which Norton said is counter to the advertising campaign.”
Jack, why do you so rarely post sources for your stories? I am interested in where you got these two claims:
“Incredible they found over 25,000 dead people still voting in CA.”
Is this the number of dead people voting, or the number of dead people who are registered? Voter registration fraud and in-person voter fraud are two different things. Both are serious, but voter ID laws would not do much to combat registration fraud.
“It’s estimated that over 1,000,000 votes will be cast nationwide today that are illegal.”
Estimated by who? The estimate I’ve seen is much, much smaller.
Chris, I did post my sources, starting with the title. ..NBC finds…
Check the hyperlinks, also written in the story. But, you can verfiy this information so easily, just google it or do a net search with whatever…it’s all over the web.
I meant posting links, Jack. And you did not embed “hyperlinks,” you embedded one hyperlink, singular.
I found some of the articles you are referring to, and you have misrepresented them. You claimed that NBC “found over 25,000 dead people still voting in CA.” What NBC actually says is that they “found over 25,000 questionable names still on the state voter rolls.” It says that “some” of these names voted, not all or even most. It’s bad, and I’m glad NBC is looking into it. But your article exaggerates the problem.
http://www.nbcbayarea.com/investigations/Dead-and-Still-Voting-177286281.html
Furthermore, I can’t find anything on Google to support your claim that “It’s estimated that over 1,000,000 votes will be cast nationwide today that are illegal.” Can you provide a link to your source for this information?
Nope, there are two hyperlinks Chris. One at the top in one article and one towards the lower part of the page in the other. They are underlined sentences, but those are the hyperlinks I was referring to.
I did not exaggerate anything.. I quoted an NBC news story. Listen to it on Armstrong and Getty, 8 a.m. hour. 2 minute into the broadcast. Kevin Niast reporting, here his words Chris then tell me I was exaggerating.